March Hogs and Pigs Report: No Surprises

The U.S.D.A. March 01 quarterly Hogs and Pigs Report did not come out with any big surprises.

March 01 Inventory (1000) head

2011

2012

2012 as percent of 2011

All Hogs and Pigs

63,684

64,872

102

Kept for Breeding

5,788

5,820

101

Market Hogs

57,896

59,052

102

Market Hogs and Pigs by Weight Groups (1000) head

 

2011

2012

2012 as a percent of 2011

Under 50 pounds

18,863

19,332

102

50 – 119 pounds

16,060

16,456

102

120 – 179 pounds

12,361

12,569

102

180 pounds and over

10,612

10,695

101

              Kept for breeding is up 32,000 sows which is not a significant increase.  Our opinion over the last couple of months is that the breeding herd was expanding.  In the last quarter (Dec 1 – Mar 1) the herd has increased 17,000, not a significant increase but a trend if continued would begin to become a major factor.  Our sense is that current corn prices of $6.50 and the drop in lean hog futures by $20 per head will have taken the edge off most enthusiasm for further net expansion.  90 cent lean hogs and $6.50 corn = little if any profit.

            Market hog numbers year over year are up 1.150 million.  If we use a 25 week birth to market scenario, 1.150 million head would be about 43,000 more head a week over the next 6 months.  Couple this with the trend line of heavier carcass weights.  There will be obviously more pork to sell.  Keep in mind the U.S. people population grows over 1% per year a continual domestic demand enhancer. The December – February U.S. pig crop was up 3% on less than a ½ of 1% increase in the breeding herd.  There were 28,681 million in this year’s pig crop up about 800,000 from a year ago.  The productivity trend line that we have had over the last couple of years has been extraordinary.  Much of the gain we have been observing has been from the litter size enhancement the swine genetic industry has been achieving.  At Genesus we continue to see litter size jump of around .25 per litter per year.  A boost of over half a pig per sow per year, year upon year of such trend line pushes productivity gains as we see in the U.S.D.A. report. With a 3% jump in the pig crop we could expect a larger increase in market hog numbers.  We wonder if the lower market hog numbers are a reflection of the mortality from the major PRRS breaks this winter. We expect the report will do little to change the market versus expectations.  Going forward the extra market hogs in the inventory are not that significant compared to domestic demand, export demand, chicken supply, and beef supply.  In the coming weeks as the seasonal supply of hogs decline look for hog prices to go higher.  We are still of the opinion $1.00 lean hogs will be reached this summer.

Grains – Oilseeds

            Last Friday the U.S.D.A. released prospective planting acreage for 2012 crop year.  Corn was estimated at 95.9 million acres up from last year.  91.92 million Or 4 million acres more, Soybeans 73.90 million acres down one million acres from last year.  All wheat 55.91 million acres up from last year’s 54.41; put together more corn, wheat less soybeans.  That is a total acreage increase of 4 million acres.  The crop is not in the ground but as usual high prices always will lead to increased production. Corn acreage at 95.9 million acres is the highest U.S. corn acreage since 1937.

            The big driver on current prices was lower quarterly stocks.  Corn was down 8% or 400 million bushels, soybeans are slightly up in inventory, and wheat is down 200 million bushels.  The drop in corn inventory coupled with historically high corn plantings are leading to May corn at $6.50 a bushel while December 2012 corn is $5.40 a bushel – a $1.10 a bushel spread.  Maybe historically one of the greatest prices spreads in one calendar year ever?  The next few months the thing for sure is ongoing wild price swings?

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This post was written by Genesus